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  1. Claude Lévi-Strauss: A Bibliographic Essay.FranÇois H. Lapointe - 1973 - Man and World 6 (4):445.
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  • A portrait of the political agent in Jean-Paul Sartre : views on playing, acting, temporality and subjectivity.Leena Subra - 1997 - Jyväskylä Studies in Education, Psychology and Social Research 1997.
    The study discusses the political in Jean-Paul Sartre's work, focusing principally on the conceptual constructions through which the agent acting in a political action situation can be interpreted from the texts. Sartre's conception of the political agent is discussed against the background of the operational concepts and the limit-situation as an ideal type action situation construed as conceptual devices in the work for showing both Sartre's fashion of using and of construing concepts. In addition certain metaphors such as theater, play (...)
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  • Dialectic Aspects of Belief.Raymond Ruyer & S. J. Greenleaves - 1967 - Diogenes 15 (60):64-79.
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  • Spinoza y una alternativa a la dialéctica: monismo y sublimación.Gonzalo Ricci Cernadas - 2022 - Hybris, Revista de Filosofí­A 13 (1):69-91.
    The work will be structured in three sections. The first of them analyzes how the different specialists in Spinozian work have studied the Dutch corpus in a dialectical way. This type of interpretation will be emphasized here not only in regard to Spinoza's own ontology, but also to his political philosophy. Secondly, this article investigates the way in which Spinozian ontology can be studied, proposing that, rather than making use of a dialectical method of Hegelian roots, it is rather possible (...)
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  • (1 other version)Dialectic and structure in Jean-Paul Sartre and Claude Lévi-Strauss.Richard Harvey Brown - 1979 - Human Studies 2 (1):1-19.
    The things themselves, which only the limited brains of men and animals believe fixed and stationary, have no real existence at all. They are the flashing and sparks of drawn swords, the glow of victory in the conflict of opposing qualities. SummaryThe conflicts between the eristentialism of Jean‐Paul Sartre and the structuralism of Claude Lévi‐Strauss present a privileged site for illuminating larger conflicts in the human studies as a whole. The present paper argues that a method for addressing and perhaps (...)
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